AQA GCSE 2026

🧮 AQA GCSE Mathematics Formula Sheet

Comprehensive formulas for number, ratio, algebra, graphs, sequences, mensuration, trigonometry, statistics, probability, and kinematics — aligned to AQA GCSE Mathematics (8300/8301).

Number & ratio Algebra & graphs Mensuration Trig & stats

Our formula sheets are free to download — save this one as PDF for offline revision.

Aligned with the latest 2026 syllabus and board specifications. This sheet is prepared to match your exam board’s official specifications for the 2026 exam series.

Master GCSE Mathematics

This sheet brings together the relationships you use most often across Foundation and Higher, from percentages and proportion through to sine/cosine rule, grouped means, and constant-acceleration equations — so you can revise and apply them in one place.

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Number & proportion

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Geometry & mensuration

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Statistics & probability

Algebra & trig

Number, ratio & proportion

Percentages, growth, standard measures, and proportional reasoning used across GCSE papers.

Percentage change

Increase or decrease relative to an original value.

Change (%) = ((New − Original) / Original) × 100

Simple interest

P principal, R annual % rate, T years.

Interest = (P × R × T) / 100

Compound interest & growth

P principal, r decimal rate per period, n periods per year, t years.

A = P(1 + r/n)^(nt)

Ratio & proportion

Equivalent ratios and cross-multiplication.

a : b = c : d ⟺ a/b = c/d ⟹ ad = bc

Speed, distance, time

Consistent units (e.g. m/s, km/h).

speed = distance / time
distance = speed × time

Density

Mass m, volume V.

density = mass / volume

Pressure (force & area)

F force, A area.

pressure = force / area

Direct proportion

y proportional to x.

y = kx (k constant)

Inverse proportion

y inversely proportional to x.

y = k/x or xy = k

Topic Focus

Exam tips

  • Convert mixed units before substituting (e.g. km → m, hours → minutes).
  • For reverse percentage problems, identify whether the ‘new’ value is after an increase or decrease.
  • Show working: method marks often depend on a correct ratio or percentage set-up.

Algebra, graphs & sequences

Linear and quadratic relationships, coordinate facts, and common sequence formulae.

Straight-line graph

m gradient, c y-intercept.

y = mx + c

Gradient from two points

Points (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂).

m = (y₂ − y₁) / (x₂ − x₁)

Perpendicular lines

Gradients m₁ and m₂ (neither vertical/horizontal mismatch).

m₁ × m₂ = −1

Midpoint of a line segment

Between (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂).

((x₁ + x₂)/2 , (y₁ + y₂)/2)

Distance between two points

In the coordinate plane.

d = √[(x₂ − x₁)² + (y₂ − y₁)²]

Quadratic formula

Roots of ax² + bx + c = 0, a ≠ 0.

x = [−b ± √(b² − 4ac)] / (2a)

Difference of two squares

Factorising.

a² − b² = (a − b)(a + b)

Arithmetic sequence — nth term

First term a, common difference d.

uₙ = a + (n − 1)d

Arithmetic series — sum of n terms

Last term l optional.

Sₙ = n/2 [2a + (n − 1)d]
Sₙ = n/2 (a + l)

Geometric sequence — nth term

First term a, common ratio r.

uₙ = arⁿ⁻¹

Geometric series — sum of n terms

r ≠ 1.

Sₙ = a(1 − rⁿ) / (1 − r)

Circle in the plane

Centre (a, b), radius r.

(x − a)² + (y − b)² = r²

Topic Focus

Graph & algebra

  • Parallel lines share the same gradient; perpendicular gradients multiply to −1.
  • For quadratics, link discriminant b² − 4ac to number of real roots.
  • Check sequence type: constant first difference → arithmetic; constant ratio → geometric.

Geometry — perimeter, area & circles

Plane shapes, compound figures, and circle measures.

Rectangle

Length l, width w.

Area = lw
Perimeter = 2l + 2w

Triangle

Base b, perpendicular height h.

Area = ½ × b × h

Parallelogram

Base b, perpendicular height h.

Area = b × h

Trapezium

Parallel sides a and b, perpendicular height h.

Area = ½ (a + b) × h

Circle

Radius r, diameter d = 2r.

Area = πr²
Circumference = 2πr = πd

Arc length

Angle θ° at centre.

Arc = (θ/360) × 2πr

Sector area

Angle θ° at centre.

Sector area = (θ/360) × πr²

Topic Focus

Mensuration

  • Height must be perpendicular to the chosen base.
  • For composite shapes, split into standard shapes and add or subtract areas.
  • Keep angles in degrees consistent with arc/sector formulae above.

Geometry — volume & surface area

Prisms, cylinders, cones, spheres, and pyramids.

Prism

Cross-sectional area A, length l.

Volume = A × l

Cylinder

Radius r, height h.

Volume

V = πr²h

Curved surface area

2πrh

Cone

Radius r, height h, slant height l.

Volume

V = ⅓ πr²h

Curved surface area

πrl

Link

l² = r² + h² (Pythagoras)

Sphere

Radius r.

Volume

V = (4/3)πr³

Surface area

A = 4πr²

Pyramid

Base area A, perpendicular height h.

V = ⅓ × A × h

Pythagoras’ theorem

Right-angled triangle, hypotenuse c.

a² + b² = c²

Topic Focus

3D problems

  • Volume of prism = uniform cross-section × length (or height along the prism).
  • Cone and pyramid volumes both use the factor one-third.
  • Use Pythagoras in 3D to find slant heights and diagonals when needed.

Trigonometry

Right-angled triangles, sine/cosine rules, and triangle area.

SOHCAHTOA (right-angled triangles)

Angle θ opposite, adjacent, hypotenuse.

sin θ = opposite / hypotenuse
cos θ = adjacent / hypotenuse
tan θ = opposite / adjacent

Sine rule

Any triangle with sides a, b, c opposite angles A, B, C.

a / sin A = b / sin B = c / sin C

Cosine rule

Finding a side or an angle.

a² = b² + c² − 2bc cos A
cos A = (b² + c² − a²) / (2bc)

Area of a triangle (two sides and included angle)

Sides b, c and included angle A.

Area = ½ bc sin A

Topic Focus

Choosing a method

  • Right-angled only: SOHCAHTOA or Pythagoras.
  • Non-right: sine rule when you have a matching side/angle pair; cosine rule for SAS or SSS.
  • Always check your calculator is in degree mode for GCSE unless a question specifies radians.

Statistics & probability

Summaries of data, probability rules, and expectation.

Mean

Arithmetic average.

mean = (sum of values) / (number of values)

Estimated mean (grouped data)

Midpoints mᵢ, frequencies fᵢ.

≈ Σ(mᵢ × fᵢ) / Σfᵢ

Range

Spread of data.

range = largest value − smallest value

Median & mode

Median: middle value when ordered; mode: most frequent.

If there is an even count of values, median is the mean of the two middle values.

Probability of an event

Equally likely outcomes.

P(A) = (number of outcomes for A) / (total possible outcomes)

Complement

Probability of not A.

P(not A) = 1 − P(A)

Independent events

A and B independent.

P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B)

Expected frequency

Trials n, probability p of success.

expected frequency ≈ n × p

Topic Focus

Data & chance

  • Mean uses all values and is pulled by outliers; median is often better for skewed data.
  • Probabilities lie between 0 and 1; the sum of probabilities of all mutually exclusive outcomes is 1.
  • For tree diagrams, multiply along branches for combined events.

Kinematics (constant acceleration)

suvat relationships used in GCSE Mathematics and linked contexts; u initial velocity, v final, a acceleration, s displacement, t time.

Definitions

Straight-line motion with constant acceleration.

v = u + at
s = ½(u + v)t
s = ut + ½at²
v² = u² + 2as

Topic Focus

Using suvat

  • Use consistent SI units: m, s, m/s, m/s².
  • Define a positive direction first; negative acceleration means slowing in the positive direction.
  • Identify which quantity is missing and pick the equation that contains only knowns and that unknown.

How to Use This Formula Sheet

Boost your Cambridge exam confidence with these proven study strategies from our tutoring experts.

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Practice Problem-Solving

Apply formulas to real-world GCSE problems. Don't just memorize—understand when and why to use each formula.

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Check Units

Always verify units match before substituting values. Convert units if necessary to ensure consistency.

Formula sheet FAQ

Quick answers about this free PDF, how to use it for exam revision, and how it relates to your official syllabus.

Is the AQA GCSE Mathematics Formula Sheet 2026 free to download as a PDF?

Yes. This Tutopiya formula sheet is free to use and you can download it as a PDF from this page for offline revision. There is no payment or account required for the PDF download.

What Mathematics topics and equations does this formula sheet cover?

This page groups key Mathematics formulas in one place for revision. Comprehensive AQA GCSE Mathematics formulas: number, ratio, algebra, graphs, sequences, mensuration, trigonometry, statistics, probability, and suvat kinematics for UK GCSE (8300/8301). Always cross-check with your official syllabus and past papers for your exam session.

Can I use this instead of the official exam formula booklet in the exam?

No. In the exam you must follow only what your exam board allows in the hall—usually the official formula booklet or data sheet where provided. This page is a revision and teaching aid, not a replacement for board-issued materials.

Who is this formula sheet for (Secondary Education)?

It is written for students preparing for assessments at Secondary Education in Mathematics, including classroom revision, homework support, and independent study. Teachers and tutors can also share it as a quick reference.

How should I revise with this formula sheet?

Work through past paper questions, quote the correct formula before substituting values, and check units and notation every time. Pair this sheet with timed practice and mark schemes so you see how examiners expect working to be set out.

Where can I get more help with Mathematics revision?

Explore Tutopiya’s study tools, past paper finder, and revision checklists linked from our tools hub, or book a trial lesson with a subject specialist for personalised support alongside this formula reference.

Excel in AQA GCSE Mathematics

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Reference sheet for revision: check the AQA GCSE Mathematics specification (8300/8301) for which formulae are given in the exam and which must be recalled.

Always show your working and include units in your final answers.